Coronary stents are the best treatment method ever accepted in the treatment of coronary artery stenoses. Due to some limitations and complications of stent use, the operators tried to find new solutions. Drug Coated Balloons (DCBs) have been accepted as a new method in the treatment of in-stent restenosis and small vessel disease. Furthermore, they have been used in the treatment of de novo coronary lesions, chronic total occlusions and bifucation lesions. But data is limited in the short and long term success of DCBs in all these clinical scenarios. In our study we aimed to investigate the procedural success and short and long term outcomes of DCB use in different clinical scenarios.
The DCB-DCS (Drug-Coated Balloon in Different Clinical Scenarios) Registry is a multicenter, observational study designed to evaluate the safety, feasibility, and clinical outcomes of drug-coated balloon (DCB) angioplasty in a broad spectrum of coronary artery disease presentations and lesion subsets in real-world practice across Türkiye. The registry aims to provide comprehensive evidence on contemporary DCB use beyond conventional in-stent restenosis, including de novo small and large vessels, bifurcation lesions, chronic total occlusions, acute coronary syndromes, and complex lesion morphologies. Consecutive patients undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) with a DCB-based strategy, either as a stand-alone therapy or in combination with bailout stenting, will be prospectively and retrospectively enrolled from participating high-volume centers. Detailed demographic, clinical, laboratory, angiographic, procedural, and pharmacological data will be systematically collected. Lesion characteristics will be classified according to standard angiographic and anatomical criteria, and procedural techniques including lesion preparation strategy (plain balloon, cutting/scoring balloon, high-pressure non-compliant balloon, atherectomy), use of intravascular imaging (IVUS, OCT, OFDI), and DCB type, size, and inflation protocol will be recorded. The registry will assess short-term procedural success and long-term clinical outcomes, including major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), target lesion failure, target vessel revascularization, myocardial infarction, stent thrombosis (when applicable), and all-cause and cardiovascular mortality. Subgroup analyses will explore the impact of different clinical presentations, lesion subsets, and procedural strategies on outcomes, with particular emphasis on the role of optimal lesion preparation, intravascular imaging guidance, and the need for bailout stenting. By reflecting routine clinical practice in a large, unselected population, the DCB-DCS Registry seeks to define optimal procedural standards, identify predictors of success and failure, and generate hypothesis-forming data to guide future randomized controlled trials comparing DCB-based strategies with new-generation drug-eluting stents across diverse coronary scenarios.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
1,500
Pamukkale University
Denizli, Turkey (Türkiye)
RECRUITINGBahcelievler Memorial Hospital
Istanbul, Turkey (Türkiye)
RECRUITINGBezmialem Vakıf Universitesi
Istanbul, Turkey (Türkiye)
RECRUITINGGoztepe Medicalpark Hastanesi
Istanbul, Turkey (Türkiye)
RECRUITINGKutahya City Hospital
Kütahya, Turkey (Türkiye)
RECRUITINGDeath, target lesion revascularization, target vessel revascularization, myocardial infarction
Cardiac or noncardiac death events will be recorded during follow up. Forthermore, target vessel or lesion revascularization, myocardial infarction will be recorded according to the previously described criteria.
Time frame: 12 months
Angina, target vessel revascularization, Procedural success and need for bailout stenting, Major bleeding (BARC ≥3)
Assessment of symptomatic angina status, need for repeat revascularization of the target vessel, procedural success including the requirement for bailout stent implantation, and the occurrence of major bleeding events defined as Bleeding Academic Research Consortium (BARC) type ≥3.
Time frame: 12 months
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